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Amazing Archigram, 1964 Cover illustration of the fourth issue of Archigram magazine Archigram

Walking City in New York, 1964 Ron Herron, Archigram Courtesy Ron Herron Archive

Seaside Bubbles, 1966 Ron Herron, Archigram Courtesy Ron Herron Archive

Living Pod, 1966 David Greene, Archigram

Tuned Suburb, 1968 Ron Herron, Archigram Courtesy Ron Herron Archive

Instant City Airships, 1968 Peter Cook, Archigram

Banquet, Features Monte-Carlo, 1969 Peter Cook, Dennis Crompton, Ron Herron, Archigram

Electronic Tomato, 1969 Warren Chalk, David Greene, Archigram

Archigram
Architects (1961-1974)

ARCHIGRAM dominated the architectural avant garde in the 1960s and early 1970s with its playful, pop-inspired visions of a technocratic future after its formation in 1961 by a group of young London architects Warren Chalk, Peter Cook, Dennis Crompton, David Greene, Ron Herron and Michael Webb. A new generation of architecture must arise with forms and spaces which seems to reject the precepts of Modern yet in fact retains those precepts. We have chosen to by pass the decaying Bauhaus image which is an insult to functionalism. You can roll out steel any length. You can blow up a balloon any size. You can mould plastic any shape. Blokes that built the Forth Bridge they didnt worry. So wrote David Greene in a poem published in the first issue of Archigram magazine or, as Greenes co-editor, Peter Cook, called it a message, or abstract communication. It was published in 1961 on a large sheet of the cheapest available paper. Filled with Greenes poems and sketches of architectural projects designed by Cook, Michael Spider Webb and other friends, the magazine voiced their frustration with the intellectual conservatism of the British architectural establishment. It was a time of radical change. Politics had skipped a generation when John F. Kennedy was elected president of the United States in 1960. The theories of Michel Foucault, Roland Barthes and Claude Lvi-Strauss were igniting the intelligentsia; as were the films of JeanLuc Godard, Federico Fellini and Franois Truffaut in cinema. It was also a time of extraordinary technological advances when the Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space and the first weather satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral. The photocopier was invented, as were laser action hologram and the contraceptive pill. Prosperous and self-satisfied after a decade of post-war reconstruction, British architecture the staid Queen Mother of the arts as the critic Reyner Banham described it had chosed to ignore these changes. Determined to develop their own approach, rather than risk being coopted into the architectural establishment, the Archigram group inveighed against what Cook later described as: the crap going up in London, against the attitude of a continuing

European tradition of well-mannered, but gutless architecture that had absorbed the label Modern but had betrayed most of the philosophies of the earliest Modern. They sold 300 copies of their magazine at nine pence each, mostly to architectural students and assistants in architects offices. As Cook recalled, it was brushed off by the few senior architects who saw it as a student joke andeverybody thought it would die a natural death. A year later, he, Greene and Webb printed a second, more substantial issue, which was typeset on stapled pages like a conventional magazine. It consisted of statements of intent by young architects including a trio Warren Chalk, Dennis Crompton and Ron Herron who worked together at London County Council and whose names had been noted enviously by the Archigrams founders as the runners-up in various architectural competitions. The second issue of Archigram came out in 1962, the year when Yves Saint Laurent opened his Paris fashion house, the Beatles stormed the pop charts with their debut single Love Me Do and Bob Dylan released his first album. Pop art hit the headlines when The New Realists, an exhibition featuring the work of Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Claus Oldenburg, opened in New York and, a few months later, the young British artists David Hockney, Allen Jones and Peter Blake were the hit of the Paris Biennial. Cook, Greene, Webb and their new collaborators Chalk, Crompton and Herron were invited to produce an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. It opened in 1963 as Living City, a manifesto for their belief in the city as a unique organism, which is more than a collection of buildings, but a means of liberating people by embracing technology and empowering them to choose how to lead their lives. Living City caught the attention of Reyner Banham who, having championed Alison and Peter Smithson, two of the few senior architects whom the Archigram group admired, in the 1950s, now hailed Archigram as the pioneers of a new pop architecture in the 1960s. Rather than dying the natural death as its critics had expected, Archigram the magazine and its editors flourished. Archigram was defined less by a specific set of principles, than by an optimistic spirit. Its members shared a refusal to be shackled by the past The pre-packaged frozen lunch is more important than Palladio, opined Peter Cook and a belief that the potent combination of social change and technological advance would foster a more humane architecture equipped to embrace the complexities and opportunities of contemporary life. One of its strengths was the diversity of a group in which the six core members and their collaborators came from very different backgrounds with different skills and enthusiasms. The overlap was an enjoyment of teasing, wrote Cook, teasing the architectural extremity, and most of the architectural language. The US critic Michael Sorkin defined Archigrams influences as a combination of Britains heroic engineering heritage Crystal Palace, the Dreadnought, the Spitfire, the Forth Bridge and the work of Isambard Kingdom Brunel with Buckminster Fullers technocractic idealism and vernacular images of Marvel Comics and The Eagle, Meccano, sci-fi films, pop music, funfairs and pop art. Bewitched by nomadic fantasies, Archigram argued that an architecture based on mobility and malleability could set people free, he wrote. This notion of consumer choice combined optimised technology, a post-Beat hitchhikers sense of freedom and the giddy styles of customisation found in Detroit.

Critically, Archigrams approach to architecture was fun, as illustrated by two of the groups most memorable projects: Ron Herrons 1964 cartoon drawings of a Walking City, in which a city of giant, reptilian structures literally glided across the globe on enormous legs until its inhabitants found a place where they wanted to settle; and the crane-mounted living pods that could be plugged in wherever their inhabitants wished in Peter Cooks 1964 Plug-in City. Equally irreverent were the ingenious devices that Archigram dreamt up to fulfil the functions of traditional buildings from miniaturised capsule homes like Ron Herron and Warren Chalks 1965 Gasket Homes and David Greenes 1966 Living Pod, or Michael Webbs 1966 Cushicle mobile environment and his 1967 wearable house, the Suitaloon. In 1968, the group proposed to transport all the entertainment and education resources of a metropolis in an Instant City airship, which would fly from place to place and temporarily land in small communites to enable the inhabitants to enjoy the buzz of life in a city. By the end of the 1960s, Archigrams magazine was selling several thousand copies an issue and had published the work of then-aspiring architects such as Nicholas Grimshaw, Arata Isozaki, Hans Hollein and Frei Otto as well as the members of the group. In 1969, the group, which, by then, had gained Colin Fournier and Ken Allison, opened an architectural practise after winning a competition to design a leisure centre in Monte-Carlo. The design was of an enormous circular dome buried underground by the Mediterranean. The seats, toilets and lights were mounted on wheels to be moved around into new configurations as the use of the building changed. The funding collapsed and the leisure centre was never built. The cultural climate, once so empathetic to Archigrams technocractic optimism, was darkening as the brutality of the war in Vietnam and civil unrest in Northern Ireland, demonstrated the macabre side of technological advances. Over the next five years, Archigram fragmented as its members left to pursue new interests. When the practise dissolved in 1974, Archigram had realised three projects, all completed in 1973 by Dennis Crompton and Ron Herron: a childrens playground in Milton Keynes, an exhibition at the Commonwealth Institute in London and a swimming pool for the singer Rod Stewart. Archigram gave us a chance to let rip and show what we wanted to do if only anyone would let us, said Ron Herron just before his death in 1994. They didnt. Yet Archigrams influence has endured. It is visible not only in the subsequent work of the groups members but in buildings by other architects such as Richard Rogers and Renzo Pianos jubilantly technocractic Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris or Will Alsops ebullient Peckham Library in south London. It is also acknowledged in the writing of later generations of architects such as Zaha Hadid and Rem Koolhaas who described Archigram in his Report on the City 1 and 2 as being among the last new movements in urbanism. Design Museum, 2007 BIOGRAPHY 1927 Warren Chalk born in London: studies at Manchester School of Art. 1930 Ron Herron born in London: studies architecture at the Brixton School of Building and Regent Street Polytechnic, London.

1935 Dennis Crompton born in Blackpool: studies architecture at Manchester University. 1936 Peter Cook born in Southend on Sea: studies at Bournemouth School of Art and the Architectural Association in London. 1937 David Greene born in Nottingham, where he will study architecture. Michael Webb born in Henley on Thames: studies at Regent Street Polytechnic in London. 1961 Peter Cooke, David Greene and Michael Webb launch Archigram as a single sheet magazine or instant communication. 1962 They invite like-minded architects to contribute to the second issue including Warren Chalk, Dennis Crompton and Ron Herron, all working for London County Council. Theo Crosby employs all six in the special design group of the Taylor Woodrow Construction Company. 1963 The group is invited to organise a manifesto exhibition Living City at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. 1964 Living City is published in the third issue of Archigram, as is Peter cook's Plug-In City in the fourth and Ron Herrons Walking City in the fifth. 1965 Peter Cook develops the Plug-in University as an extension of his Plug-in City. The groups experiments with capsules for living produce Ron Herron and Warren Chalks Gasket Home enclosures. 1966 David Greene designs the Living Pod for capsule living and Michael Webb the Cushicle mobile environment. 1967 The Daily Telegraph invites Archigram to design a house for the year 1990 to be exhibited in Harrods. It has moveable walls, ceilings and floors with inflatable sleeping and seating structures. Michael Webb designs the Suitaloon wearable house. 1968 The Instant City project funded by the Gaham Foundation, Chicago explores the concept of a travelling city airship with the entertainment and educational resources of a metropolis. 1969 Archigram wins a competition to design a leisure centre in Monte-Carlo and opens an architectural practise. 1972 Dennis Crompton and Ron Herron design a swimming pool for the singer Rod Stewart and a childrens playground in Milton Keynes. 1973 Crompton and Herron design the Instant Malaysia exhibition at the Commonwealth Institute in London. 1974 Archigram office closes. 1987 Death of Warren Chalk.

1994 Death of Ron Herron. The exhibition Archigram: Experimental Architecture opens in Vienna, then Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and tours the world for the next decade. 2002 Archigram is awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects. 2004 The Archigram exhibition is presented at the Design Museum. 2007 Peter Cook awarded a knighthood for services to architecture. Design Museum, 2007 FURTHER READING Archigram, Peter Cook, Princeton Architectural Press, 1999 Concerning Archigram, Dennis Crompton, Archigram Archives, 1999 Archigram: Architecture Now, Ron Herron and Dennis Crompton, St Martins Press, 1980 Peter Cook: Beyond Archigram: A Bibiliography, Sara S. Richardson, Vance Bibiliographies, 1999 A Guide to Archigram: 1961-1974, Herbert Lachmayer, Wiley-Academy, 1994 Archigram, Peter Cook, Studio Vista, 1972 For more information on British design and architecture go to Design in Britain, the online archive run as a collaboration between the Design Museum and British Council, at designmuseum.org/designinbritain

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